REAL KIDS REAL PLACES AMERICA S NATIONAL MYSTERY BOOK SERIES TM One Cape! One Cod! One Lighthouse! One Stormy Sea! And Lots of Mystery! CAROLE MARSH B Y C A R O L E M A R S H
The Mystery at Cape Cod Teacher s Guide by Carole Marsh Editorial Assistant: Sherri Smith Brown Art & Design: Randolyn Friedlander 2010 Carole Marsh/Gallopade International/Peachtree City, GA Permission is hereby granted to the individual purchaser or classroom teacher to reproduce worksheets, quizzes, and activity pages (only) for individual or classroom use only. Reproduction of these materials for an entire school or school system is strictly prohibited. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Page # Subject EXPLORE! 11 Geography Cape Cod is a large peninsula extending 60 miles into the Atlantic ocean from the coast of Massachusetts. It forms a wide curve enclosing Cape Cod Bay. 12 Vocabulary A peninsula is a piece of land that juts out into the water but is connected to the mainland by a strip of land called an isthmus. Do you know of any other peninsulas? 13 Vocabulary Something is weathered when its appearance has been changed or worn away by a long exposure to the elements. Wooden houses in Cape Cod have been weathered by rain, wind, and cold. 13 Towns Provincetown is a well-known resort and artists community at the northern tip of Cape Cod. 14 Agriculture Cranberries are small, red, acid berries used in cooking. They grow in bogs wet, muddy ground that is too soft to support anything heavy. So many cranberries grow in Cape Cod that the cranberry is the state berry of Massachusetts! 14 Towns Originally home to the Nauset Indians, Eastham was settled in 1651 by a group of Pilgrims dissatisfied with Plymouth. Eastham is known for shellfish and agriculture, and as a summer resort. 16 Weather Papa cannot land the Mystery Girl in Provincetown because a nor easter is expected. Read what is said about a nor easter on page 16. Why would you not want to keep a plane on Cape Cod during such a violent storm? 18 Vocabulary Arabella maneuvered the car through the heavy Boston traffic. That means she drove it skillfully and carefully. 19 Feelings The kids are excited to think they might see a whale from the restaurant window; but when none appears, Grant is dejected. That means he is very disappointed. Have you ever been excited about something and then dejected when nothing happened? Carole Marsh/Gallopade International www.gallopade.com The Mystery at Cape Cod TG 4
19 Industry Whaling is the industry of hunting and killing whales for their oil, meat, or bones. 21 Fish The Atlantic codfish is so abundant in the waters around Cape Cod that it has been named the state fish. 21 Industry Fishing has always been a big industry in Cape Cod, but the government has placed a lot of regulations on fishing because waters have been overfished and stocks of fish are decreasing. Fishing boats must go out 100 miles into the ocean to catch their fill. Today, tourist dollars are becoming more important than fishing to the economy of many Cape Cod towns. 22 Vocabulary A bed and breakfast is a guesthouse that provides guests with a room for the night and a morning meal. 23 Natural Feature A sand dune is a mound or ridge of sand formed by the wind. They are found in the desert or on the seacoast, like at Cape Cod. 26 Landmark The Pilgrim Monument in Provincetown commemorates the history of the Mayflower Pilgrims and their stay in Provincetown Harbor. It is the tallest all-granite structure in the United States. 27 Landmark In the early 1900s, engineers dug out the isthmus of Cape Cod to build the Cape Cod Canal so boats and ships could pass through rather than go around the dangerous cape. This unofficially turned Cape Cod into an island! Do you know of any other famous canals? 27 Industry Sandwich is known for its pressed glass, a form of glass made by pressing molten, or very hot, glass into a mold. Pressed glass was invented in 1825 to make knobs for furniture, but developed into an inexpensive way to mass-produce glassware. 28 Craftspeople Glassblowing is the craft of making glassware by blowing through a tube of molten glass. A person who blows glass is called a glassblower. Do you know any glassblowers? 30 Vocabulary Erosion is the process of eroding, or gradually wearing away, by wind, water, or other natural agents. Carole Marsh/Gallopade International www.gallopade.com The Mystery at Cape Cod TG 5
30 Vocabulary Because of erosion, many scientists believe that thousands of years from now, Cape Cod will be submerged by the sea. What does submerge mean? 30 Feelings Grant is alarmed about the idea that Cape Cod will disappear some day. That means he is fearful or frightened. Have you ever been alarmed by the idea that something might happen? 31 National Seashore The Cape Cod National Seashore protects miles of sandy shoreline and thousands of acres of dunes, marshes, and ponds on Cape Cod. President John F. Kennedy, who had grown up in Hyannisport on Cape Cod, established the National Seashore in 1961 to protect Cape Cod from further development. 31 Vocabulary To illuminate something means to supply it with light. The dunes were illuminated by the soft, silvery moonlight. 32 Writer Henry David Thoreau was an America author and poet born in Concord, Massachusetts. In the mid-19 th century, he walked the Cape Cod coastline and wrote about his adventures in his book Cape Cod. Today, you would have to wear scuba gear to follow the path that Thoreau walked. Cape Cod s Outer Beach erodes at an average rate of about 3 feet per year. 33 Feelings When Mimi admitted she had been a dune dweller when she was young, everyone except Papa was awestruck. What does awestruck mean? Why do you think they felt that way? 35 Architecture Christina s room was separated from the rest of Ben and Arabella s cottage by a breezeway. A breezeway is a roofed outdoor passage. 37 Occupations Mrs. Winthrop worked at the lighthouse as a tour guide. In olden times, a lighthouse keeper was responsible for taking care of a lighthouse, particularly its lamp or lens. Keepers lived at the lighthouse so they could trim the wicks of the lamps, replenish fuel, wind the clockworks, and clean windows and lenses. Now, most things are automated, and no keeper is needed. Carole Marsh/Gallopade International www.gallopade.com The Mystery at Cape Cod TG 6